“When you start to sell your citizenship, you will sell anything,” St. Vincent & Grenadines Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves

Published: November 12, 2013 at 11:51am

The Associated Press (AP) reported last month on the sale of citizenship by Caribbean island states. Antigua’s programme, which started a few weeks ago, is similar to Malta and is also run by Henley & Partners.

Note that right in the first line, we are told that Antigua & Barbuda are doing this because they are “struggling” and need to “drum up revenue”.

ANTIGUA STARTS PROGRAM TO SELL CITIZENSHIP

By DAVID McFADDEN – AP – Mon Oct 14, 2:03PM CDT

KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) — The struggling country of Antigua & Barbuda has joined other tiny Eastern Caribbean islands in selling citizenship to wealthy international investors to drum up revenue, officials said Monday.

The twin-island nation of some 90,000 inhabitants started accepting applications last week for its citizenship-by-investment program, which is closely modeled on the one offered by nearby St. Kitts & Nevis. The government hopes to generate roughly $550 million over the next three years by attracting some 1,800 new citizens, who have to spend at least 35 days on the islands during the five-year span an initial passport is valid for.

Prime Minister Baldwin Spencer said the revenue will help put the country “on the road to sustainable growth and development.” The nation was slammed by the 2008 global economic crisis and the subsequent collapse of the financial empire of convicted fraudster R. Allen Stanford, who based his Stanford International Bank on Antigua and was once the country’s largest private employer.

Spencer called for islanders who are hesitant about the concept to “trust your government.” He said the program “should in no way jeopardize the integrity of the national passport” as critics have asserted.

A foreigner can qualify for Antiguan citizenship with a $250,000 donation or with a real estate investment of $400,000. A business investment of $1.5 million can also qualify. There are government processing fees of $50,000 for applicants and due diligence costs for background checks.

An Antigua & Barbuda passport holder can travel to some 130 countries with “relative ease and without challenging visa requirements,” according to Zurich-based Henley & Partners, a residence and citizenship planning firm which advised the government on how to set up its program.

The strategy is part of a trend in the Caribbean. For years, St. Kitts & Nevis and Dominica have given investors citizenship in return for a real estate investment or significant donation. Grenada is planning to revive a program of its own.

“Investor visas” are offered by many nations across the globe, including the U.S. and Britain. But the Caribbean countries offer a very fast path to full citizenship at a relatively low cost. The whole process, including background checks, can take as little as 90 days in St. Kitts, where there’s no need to ever live on the islands, or even visit.

Some Caribbean leaders are opposed to the sale of citizenship, arguing that it undermines the integrity of their country’s passport and could dilute national identity. “When you start to sell your citizenship, you will sell anything,” St. Vincent & Grenadines Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves told reporters last year.

In Antigua, Spencer said all applications will be carefully reviewed and he’s confident the program will be rigorously managed. He is required to submit a report to lawmakers in six months on how the program is working.

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6 Comments Comment

  1. Jozef says:

    OK, Eur68,000 as CEO and Eur13,000 as non-executive chairman.

    Will he be holding meetings with himself? Ara vera mgewwhin.

    http://www.independent.com.mt/articles/2013-11-06/news/joe-cuschieri-named-chairman-of-lotteries-and-gaming-board-3110600704/

  2. La Redoute says:

    Selling everything must have been Muscat’s plan all along. Isn’t that why he was made up like a catamite for his swearing in ceremony?

  3. anthony says:

    Very true.

    Once a government is prepared to peddle its country’s identity it will not stop at anything.

    This erratic and irresponsible behavior is typical of psychopaths.

  4. Jason says:

    There was a recent news report in London of a university registered in St.Kitts and Nevis that was selling degrees.

    I wonder if that is the next step for Malta, though when I hear some Maltese graduates speak or see the way they write, I can’t help thinking they bought their way in and out.

  5. Louis Amato-Gauci says:

    Citizens of the following countries are required to hold valid visas in order to enter the United States as tourists or as business visitors: Antigua & Barbuda; Dominica; St Kitts & Nevis; and St Vincent Grenadines.

    All of these countries have “second passport” programs that are similar to Malta’s new Individual Investor Program.

  6. P Shaw says:

    Greece, Cyprus and Portugal are in a worse fiscal deficit situation. I wonder if Henley ever approached these countries with a similar proposal, and whether these governments refused the offer outright despite their desperate financial situation.

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